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Friday, March 18, 2016

[xoNecole] Go get him! Study shows women who make the first move have better dating success

I’m sitting at the bar
enjoying sushi and my second $9 cocktail when one of my friends taps the
shoulder of the guy sitting next to me.

“Hi!” she says to him.
“What’s your name?”

He tells her.

“Have you met my
friend, Tee?” she replies, as she turns her back to us to continue conversing
with the group behind us, as if she has just accomplished a major task.

It’s an awkward
introduction. He’s confused and annoyed – mainly, I presume, because dude is
already engrossed in a conversation with a young woman on the other side of
him. So I’m initially horrified because all my friend has done is inadvertently
let him know that I’m possibly 1) a relationship reject; 2) incapable of
meeting men on my own; or 3) a homewrecker. Then I grow angry because I’m none
of the above, and she’s placed me in a humiliating position all because I’m not
flirting and mingling to her satisfaction. I’m left seething in my seat, mumbling
under my breath that if I wanted to meet dude, I would’ve introduced mydamnself.

Okay, I’m lying about
that last part.

I’m not that forward
when it comes to meeting men. I’m ingrained with that you-don’t-chase-men
wisdom and that includes not approaching them to express initial interest. I’m
taught to always allow the man to come to me.

But according to an informal survey conducted by dating site OkCupid,
that way of thinking is so antiquated and doesn’t exactly yield desirable
results: “Women who reach out first have a better chance of success.” In fact,
those women who initiate contact are 2.5 times more likely to get favorable
responses than men who make the first move, and those replies will spark more
conversations with men we actually want to talk to.

“When women are
proactive, there’s a big win,” OKCupid chief product officer Jimena Almendares
tells ABC News. “This is data that is showing that if they actually speak up,
they have so much to gain.”

Admittedly, this makes
sense. Like many women, I’m generally more selective about whom I entertain or allow
in my personal space even in a public setting, so if I actually step to a guy,
I must be really intrigued and simultaneously imagining a name change,
mortgage, and a set of twins, too.

Still my initial
thought was in a world where we can now swipe left and right to a relationship,
making the first move seems more acceptable
and reasonable. But how does the information translate to real life? Will a man
find this behavior too aggressive? Emasculating? Desperate?

On a recent segment on Good Morning America, writer, author, relationship
expert, and BFF-in-my-head Demetria Lucas D’Oyley reminds us that times have
changed and first moves on our parts no longer indicate thirst, so there’s no
reason why we can’t update our rules, apply them to real life, and take complete
charge of our dating lives.

“It’s 2016,” Lucas-D’Oyley
says. “We’ve been doing things the wrong way for a really long time.”

I reflect on my dating
history just to refute OkCupid’s findings and Lucas-D’Oyley’s statement and support
my Grandma’s wise words: “You don’t chase no man.” But I find that I have no grand
success story to share. I’m usually one of those women who’s posted up outside
of the spotlight enjoying happy hour fare, afterward crossing her arms,
avoiding eye contact, delivering a mean blank stare, and daring a soul to
interrupt her chill evening.

But that’s less about
me being standoffish and more about me using past experiences to gauge my
present – I’ve had undesirable men follow and stick to me like old honey just
from exchanging pleasantries. They come out the woodwork to sniff me out like The Walking Dead extras, and spend the
remainder of my evening plotting an escape route.

And since I’m an
introvert who cringes at the idea of introductions anyway, it’s also more about
me preserving my mental energy and small talk for someone who actually piques
my curiosity. But even then, I would’ve never
stepped to him. I’d unfurrow my brow, relax my tight lips, and hope he gets the
hint that it’s okay for him to strike up a convo.

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About the Blog

Tee Elle brings back the concept of story time through a series of posts, projects, and personal essays. Through her narratives and perspectives, she hopes to teach, entertain, and inspire. Follow her stories here on the blog and highlights there on Twitter @pencilandchalk.